Change

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Anaxagoras’ cosmology

...substance, Anaxagoras included those found in living bodies, such as flesh, bone, bark, and leaf. Otherwise, he asked, how could flesh come from what is not flesh? He also accounted for biological
changes, in which substances appear under new manifestations: as men eat and drink, flesh, bone, and hair grow. In order to explain the great amount and diversity of
change, he said that “there...

Daoism

All parts of the cosmos are attuned in a rhythmical pulsation. Nothing is static; all things are subjected to periodical mutations and transformations that represent the Chinese view of creation. Instead of being opposed with a static ideal,
change itself is systematized and made intelligible, as in the theory of the Five Phases and in the 64 hexagrams of the
Yijing (
Book of...

Greek epistemology

The central focus of ancient Greek philosophy was the problem of motion. Many pre-Socratic philosophers thought that no logically coherent account of motion and
change could be given. Although this problem was primarily a concern of metaphysics, not epistemology, it had the consequence that all major Greek philosophers held that knowledge must not itself
change or be
changeable in any respect....

idealism

The third question is: What position or attitude is a thinker to take toward temporal becoming and
change and toward the presence of ends and values within the given? According to idealists, reason not only discovers a coherent order in nature but also creates the state and other cultural institutions, which together constitute the cultural order of a modern society. Idealistic political...